Financial Services Subcommittee Report Finds Decisions by Corzine, Lack of Communication Between Regulators Led to MF Global Bankruptcy and Loss of Customer Funds

Washington, Nov 15 -

The House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, chaired by Rep. Randy Neugebauer, released the full results of its year-long majority staff investigation into the collapse of MF Global on Thursday.

The report chronicles the demise of the 230-year old commodities brokerage firm, which declared bankruptcy in October 2011. MF Global’s failure was the eighth largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and resulted in a $1.6 billion shortfall in customer funds.

“We conducted this investigation because MF Global customers deserve to know how and why their funds went missing; market participants deserve to know whether regulatory lapses have been identified and will be corrected; and taxpayers deserve to know that regulators are being held accountable so similar losses may be prevented from occurring in the future,” said Chairman Neugebauer.

“Despite the promise of Dodd-Frank that regulators would work together, what the Subcommittee’s investigation found is there was no meaningful coordination among the regulators who were responsible for the supervision of MF Global,” said Financial Services Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus. “This left each regulator with an incomplete understanding of the company’s financial health – and MF Global’s customers paid the price. This, once again, raises the question of whether regulators are so preoccupied writing hundreds of new rules that they’re missing the basics like safeguarding customer funds and protecting investors from financial frauds.”

The Subcommittee staff’s investigation of MF Global involved three hearings, more than 50 witness interviews, and the review of more than 243,000 documents obtained from MF Global, its former employees, federal regulators and other sources.

· Corzine decided to transform MF Global from a futures broker to an investment bank without having a complete understanding of the futures business or the potential risks associated with such a radical transformation.

· Corzine was the driving force behind the decision to heavily invest in the sovereign debt of struggling European countries.

· The risks associated with the firm’s repo-to-maturity (RTM) portfolio were exacerbated by the lack of internal controls and an atmosphere that Corzine created, in which nobody could challenge his decisions.

· The responsibility for failing to maintain the systems and controls necessary to protect customer funds rested with Corzine.

Recommendation: Congress should consider enacting legislation that imposes civil liability on the officers and directors that sign a FCM’s financial statements or authorize specific transfers from customer segregated accounts for regulatory shortfalls of segregated customer funds.

Finding: The SEC and the CFTC Failed to Share Critical Information About MF Global with One Another, Leaving Each Regulator with an Incomplete Understanding of the Company’s Financial Health

· Both agencies focused on their respective jurisdictional interests and not the firm as whole.

· There is no record of meaningful communication between the SEC and the CFTC until the week before the company’s bankruptcy. When these regulators finally tried to coordinate, it was disorganized and haphazard.

· The SEC did not include the CFTC in discussions it had with other securities regulators related to growing concerns about MF Global’s financial health. The SEC also did not inform the CFTC about discussions about MF Global’s failure to take haircuts on its RTM portfolio. Senior CFTC officials said they “wished they were brought into the conversation” about the haircuts earlier since it affected their regulatory equities.

· The CFTC did not inform the SEC that MF Global was using the Alternative Method, which left the SEC with an incomplete picture of the firm’s liquidity situation.

· The CFTC “pressured” MF Global to transfer $220 million out of the broker-dealer excess to the FCM without consulting the SEC first. Chairman Schapiro: “Without telling us. That is unacceptable.” FINRA also said in an email that MF Global ignored SEC instructions not to transfer the funds.

Recommendation: The SEC and the CFTC streamline their operations, or merge into a single financial regulatory agency that would have oversight of the entire capital markets.

· The MF Global case alone does not necessitate the merger of the SEC and the CFTC; however the evidence found in the MF Global case is symptomatic of regulatory inefficiencies.

· As financial products, markets, and market participants have converged, the SEC’s and the CFTC’s regulatory jurisdictions have increasingly overlapped. It only makes sense to collapse these entities and create a regulatory framework that brings us into the 21st century.

Finding: MF Global Was Not Forthright with Regulators or the Public About the Degree of Its Exposure to Its European Bond Portfolio, nor was the Company Forthright About Its Liquidity Condition.

· MF Global was not forthright with FINRA about its exposure to European sovereign debt. The company denied it had European exposure in September 2010, despite a nearly $2 billion portfolio. FINRA thought this was “negligent” and “misleading.”

· MF Global did not disclose its exposure to European sovereign debt in full until a full year after it began accumulating the positions. There was no mention of net exposure in its September 2010 10-Q (when it had a $2 billion exposure) and December 2010 10-Q (a $4.5 billion exposure). MF Global finally disclosed its exposure of $6.3 billion in its March 2011 10K - released in May, 8 months after the firm entered into the trades.

· Executives presented a much more optimistic picture of its liquidity situation to the public than what was privately understood. On October 6, 2011, MF Global’s CFO Henri Steenkamp informed Corzine that one of MF Global’s affiliates was undergoing significant liquidity stress and characterized MFGI’s liquidity as being in a state of “sustained stress”. However, on an October 25, 2011 earnings call, Steenkamp described how MF Global had “improved [its] capital and liquidity positions” that quarter. Corzine backed Steenkamp’s claim by stating that MF Global’s action had put the firm in a “much, much stronger liquidity position” as of September 30. As a result of these public statements, investors were not aware of MFGI’s liquidity issues and could not assess their impact on MF Global’s overall condition.

Recommendation: The Subcommittee recommends that the SEC investigate whether MF Global violated federal securities law or SEC rules in connection with its disclosures about the European RTM trades and the firm’s overall financial health. The Subcommittee further recommends the SEC proactively conduct a review of off-balance sheet reporting, generally.

· Credit ratings were not based on a full and complete examination of all relevant information affecting the company’s long-term health.

Recommendation: Continue to press regulators to implement 939A reforms to remove references to credit ratings in statute; consider legislation to promote greater competition in credit rating industry; require some form of periodic monitoring by rating firms to ensure “fresh” ratings.

Finding: MF Global's Use of the “Alternative Method” Allowed the Company to Use Some Customer Funds as a Source of Capital for the Company's Day-to-day Operations, Which Subjected Customers to the Risk That MF Global Would Not Be Able to Return Those Funds to Customer Accounts Upon the Company’s Insolvency

· The use of the Alternative Method by MF Global put customers who traded on foreign exchanges at risk of losing money.

· The substantial “excesses” resulting from the use of the Alternative Method made customer accounts a more attractive source of liquidity for MF Global’s day-to-day operations. As a result, it is likely that MF Global’s use of the Alternative Method contributed to the shortfall in customer segregatedaccounts.

Recommendation: Agree with the CFTC to abandon the use of the Alternative Method.

Finding: The New York Fed Should Have Exercised Greater Caution in Determining Whether to Designate MF Global as a Primary Dealer, Given the Company’s Prior Risk Management Failures, Chronic Net Losses, and Evolving Business Strategy

· MF Global’s aggressive pursuit to become a primary dealer should have given the NY Fed further pause.

Recommendation: The NY Fed should consider re-examining its selection process to provide for greater scrutiny of companies with questionable financial health, risk management histories, and ambitious business strategies; the NY Fed should consider whether to expressly forbid companies from speaking to the media about pending primary dealer applications.

Finding: Differences Between Foreign and U.S. Law Gave Rise to the Potential that MFGI Global Customers Trading on Foreign Exchanges Would Experience a “Shortfall” in Funds Owed to Them, Despite the Fact that Such Funds Were Set Aside in Accounts Designated as Secured Accounts

· The disposition of funds in MFGUK’s account was subject to British law following the collapse of MF Global. As a result, MFGUK will not return these funds to MFGI until the question of ownership is resolved in the summer of 2013.

Recommendation: Direct the CFTC to study whether it could better mitigate the risks customers face when they trade abroad.